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Infosys stock has come under pressure the last few quarters despite the company's growth. Here's why, and what the company is doing to address concerns.

Infosys(NYSE:INFY) reported quarterly results on Jan. 13 and notched another increase in business. However, the company's outsourcing services have come under fire since the election of President Donald Trump. The outsourcing industry has also been facing headwinds from disruptive technologies like artificial intelligence. CEO Vishal Sikka addressed both issues the day before the new U.S. president's inauguration in an interview with The Wall Street Journal.

Infosys' CEO Vishal Sikka. Image source: Infosys.

But first, the numbers...

Compared with the previous quarter, revenue shrank 1.4% in Infosys' most recent quarter, partly because of what the company deemed seasonal weakness. However, the top line was up 6% compared with the same period the previous year. Through the first nine months of the company's fiscal year, revenue was up 8.3% compared with the previous year. Profit was up 6.1% so far on the year.

Guidance for the full fiscal year was updated. Management sees full-year revenue increasing from 8.4% to 8.8% when negating currency factors.

In spite of the overall positive update, share prices have been under pressure. In the last year, political talk about the theft (real or perceived) of jobs from local workers has cast a shadow over outsourcing companies. Also of concern are new technologies like artificial intelligence and automation, which could eliminate the need for some jobs completely.

In a recent interview, Sikka addressed these potential threats to Infosys and struck a positive tone, pointing out reasons that he's still optimistic for his company.

International politics and disruptive tech

When asked about the impact the new administration could have on Infosys, Sikka indicated his company is not overly concerned about it: "My sense is that it's going to be a business-friendly, technology-friendly, and entrepreneurship-friendly administration."

That isn't to say there couldn't be an impact in the near term, though. During his campaign, Trump spoke out against the H-1B visa program for foreign skilled workers, a program that foreign tech and outsourcing firms have relied on in the past. Said Sikka:

I think that an over-reliance on visas as a mechanism to deliver value is a bad thing. But the [United States] is built on immigration. There is going to be the right kind of mix in how we bring great talent from the outside into the country.

Basically, companies like Infosys are aware of the impact new policy could have on them in the U.S., and they're on it. Thus, a push to keep operations on a more local level could develop soon for businesses like Infosys.

Image source: Infosys Foundation USA.

One way this is being addressed is through local foundations, like the Infosys Foundation USA, set up to foster technology education. The goal is to bring computer science education to the classroom at the high-school and middle-school levels. With H-1B visas under scrutiny, the plan is to tap into such local foundations to hire, train, and manage staff from within the U.S. rather than from the outside.

Innovations in technology are also potential disruptors for Infosys. Artificial intelligence and automation have eliminated the need for many positions, including some outsourced services. Infosys has been making the transition, though, to becoming an organization that embraces AI and uses it to supplement what its workforce is already doing.

Rather than eliminating the need for Infosys, the trend has been that even more skilled labor is needed. Sikka continued:

Right now ... there is a severe shortage of highly skilled technical people. We have to teach people AI on a very large scale. We have to put together a program to bring AI to 50,000 of our employees within the next six months ... and in the last two years we have [already] trained 125,000.

Image source: Infosys.

Rather than being a disruptor, AI is helping Infosys gather new clients. Customer service, prediction analytics, and risk management have all been enhanced by the introduction of technology. The company's business software platform has also been on the rise as more businesses look that direction for help solving problems.

Times are changing

Question marks still linger. While Infosys has been working to stay ahead of the curve as technology changes the needs of businesses, the company could yet run into political headwinds in the short term. Nearly two-thirds of Infosys' business comes from the U.S.

Those uncertainties are keeping me from buying shares just yet, but as the question marks get cleared, this stock is one worth watching.

Author

Nicholas has been a writer for the Motley Fool since 2015, covering companies in the consumer goods and technology sector. He is also the founder and president of Concinnus Financial, a Registered Investment Advisor based in Spokane, WA. He enjoys the outdoors in all four seasons in the Northwest with his wife and their two Humane Society-rescued dogs.
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